Anonymous wrote:Fruit prices are crazy lately and I just go to Giant so nothing fancy.
Anonymous wrote:What are you buying? Consider shifting your fruit/vegetable purchases to be more aligned with seasonal price/availability and you may save money. What that looks like for me in winter:
Fruits: bananas, apples, citrus, pears. I buy other fruits (mango, berries, cherries) frozen and either defrost in the fridge for adding to food or mix them into smoothies, etc.
Vegetables: broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, hearty greens, onions. Frozen: peas, edamame, corn. I'll add 1-2 "treat" things like cherry tomatoes or snap peas per week if there's room in budget.
In the summer, I get a CSA ($15/week for fruit and $41/week for vegetables) and basically don't buy fruits and vegetables at the store.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can commiserate. We spend at least that on fruit and veggies. My kids are picky eaters but they will always eat fruit so I stock up. I think of it as an “investment” in their health at this point!
Op here. That is how I am looking at it too - investment in health for the future.
I like someone saying "grow your own vegetables". I am not into gardening but may have to get into it. With job scenarios being so bad, the biggest worry for me is not being able to afford basic food items.
Grow vegetables that give you the most bang for the buck: tomatoes, peppers (not bells), eggplants, cukes, okra. I’ve had bad luck with zucchini as the plants get destroyed by vine borers but if you can grow that it’s very prolific. Herbs are very easy too.
And don’t get caught into all those fancy gizmos if you decide to garden. You don’t need much to get started.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can commiserate. We spend at least that on fruit and veggies. My kids are picky eaters but they will always eat fruit so I stock up. I think of it as an “investment” in their health at this point!
Op here. That is how I am looking at it too - investment in health for the future.
I like someone saying "grow your own vegetables". I am not into gardening but may have to get into it. With job scenarios being so bad, the biggest worry for me is not being able to afford basic food items.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can commiserate. We spend at least that on fruit and veggies. My kids are picky eaters but they will always eat fruit so I stock up. I think of it as an “investment” in their health at this point!
Op here. That is how I am looking at it too - investment in health for the future.
I like someone saying "grow your own vegetables". I am not into gardening but may have to get into it. With job scenarios being so bad, the biggest worry for me is not being able to afford basic food items.
Anonymous wrote:I can commiserate. We spend at least that on fruit and veggies. My kids are picky eaters but they will always eat fruit so I stock up. I think of it as an “investment” in their health at this point!
Anonymous wrote:Fruit prices are crazy lately and I just go to Giant so nothing fancy.